The 2007 Annual Energy Outlook reports that production of offshore drilling would not start before 2017, but projects that access to Outer Continental Shelf will increase the lower-48 offshore crude oil production by only 200,000 barrels per day - a mere of the 21 million barrels of oil a day, a mere 9.5% of our consumption for a period of just 4 months.http://www.evworld.com/article.cfm?storyid=1510

A NY Times article states the following: "… The biggest problem is that much of the coastal United States, subject to a drilling ban since the early 1980s, has not been thoroughly explored for oil. Neither the industry nor the government has any definitive idea how much could be recovered. In order to hazard a guess for some areas of the Eastern Seaboard, the government has had to inspect geological maps from Morocco, which was connected to North America more than 100 million years ago…"

Congress has recently lifted the moratorium on offshore drilling. But,it currently costs $60,000 per day to rent an oil exploration platform IF you can find one that isn't already committed. In most instances the platforms are reserved for more than 10 years out.http://www.energybulletin.net/node/4466

New drilling to solve today's energy problems fits the neoclassic definition of insanity. You keep doing the same thing and expect different results. The US consumes a quarter of the world's oil but owns only 3 percent of conventional world reserves. How much oil do we want to leave for future generations so they too can paint their homes, pave their roads with asphalt, make their medicines, drink from plastic bottles, wear rubber-soled sneakers, brush their teeth and enjoy multiple other applications of petroleum?

U.S. population is projected to grow by 60 million people in the next 30 years. Assuming that by 2030 we succeed in eliminating the need for oil in the ground transportation sector, enabling vehicles to run on alternative fuels and electricity, we will still need every single year, for other purposes, an amount of oil equivalent to more than 5 percent of all the technically recoverable oil contained in ANWR and offshore combined.

Something we could do right now to decrease our transportation fuel use by 7% is passing a national speed limit. That's right, a national speed limit at 55mph would put 7% or even MORE fuel back into the system.

Here is a very interesting article on drilling in ANWR and some other concerns realted to opening drilling up there http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/columns/2008/09/Sarah-Palin-Big-Oil-Arctic.htmlSay no to the Petroleum Dream TeamGermany is rapidly approaching 22% energy production through renewables. Most of that from solar. Yes, Germany, a country not particularly well noted for its sunny climate. The United States, on the other hand, has not attained even 1% production from renewable energy technologies.

The US is a much larger country with many more complexities and the world's largest consumer of fossil fuels. We consume about 25% of the world's oil (21 million barrels of oil a day) with a fraction of the world's population. The point, however, is that the rest of the developed world is seriously looking to the future. While the rest of the world moves on, we in the US set here debating whether or not global warming is real while hopelessly clinging to the power sources from a bygone industrial age.

The world is moving to renewable energy with or without us. I hope we do not miss the boat. The opportunities for the country that takes the lead in renewable energy research and development will be the wealthiest most powerful nation on earth. I hope that nation is the US but we are going to have to move and move fast because the boat has already left the port.

A recent report showed that investment in a clean and efficient economy would "lead to over 3 million new green-collar jobs, stimulate $1.4 trillion in new GDP, add billions in personal income and retail sales, produce $284 billion in net energy savings, all while generating sufficient returns to the U.S. treasury to pay for itself over ten years."

There is so much information on the web about this issue. My main point is DRILLING IS NOT THE ANSWER. We need a sustainable solution for America's oil addiction. You can take small steps on your own to reduce your own use, but with this thirsty country sucking down 2 million barrels a day, the change needs to come from the top. Vote for the candidate who has an energy plan http://www.barackobama.com/pdf/factsheet_energy_speech_080308.pdf